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General Photography
Project 365 & Daily Photos
Moab Man 2014 Project 365
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<blockquote data-quote="Moab Man" data-source="post: 303069" data-attributes="member: 11881"><p>@<a href="http://nikonites.com/member.php?u=13223" target="_blank">Deezey</a> - I'm going to look back at my best raw D7100 shots and my D600 images and pixel peep. Once I have done that I will share my thoughts. I don't want to speak without reviewing side-by-side. I have a love affair with my D7100 and the D600 is a mistress on the side. I need to do a direct comparison of the files.</p><p> @<a href="http://nikonites.com/member.php?u=9922" target="_blank">nikonpup</a> - Light painting. The front foreground and tree was painted with my cell phone light. The light is clean and not too powerful. The cliffs were painted using a ~50 sum led light panel with a dial to increase and decrease output. </p><p> @<a href="http://nikonites.com/member.php?u=12198" target="_blank">snaphappy</a> - Lizard was on the D7100 and the Milky Way shot is the D600. Thanks for the compliment. I am working hard and taking every opportunity I can to learn and improve. This trip was particularly educational as I met up with my friend from back east that is a professional photographer. He was out here to shoot some event for Morgan Stanley (investment firm) and we decided to hook up for this shoot. He had never shot stars, Milky Way, or light painted. I in turn learned a new technique which is how I shot the tree. I keep getting comments from people that the tree looks like an overdone photoshop image when it's not, it was a technique. Just a something I learned from my friend. The benefits of what can be learned shooting with another person at your same dedication level approximate skill level is priceless. We both walked away far better photographers from our shared shooting. The Milky Way shots alone started at 11 p.m. and went until 5 a.m. when that pesky ball of fire started to screw up the sky. And the above image took about 20 shots to get it right as we dialed in the two lights and their exposure time.</p><p></p><p>Thank you to everyone for their comments, compliments, and help along the way.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Moab Man, post: 303069, member: 11881"] @[URL="http://nikonites.com/member.php?u=13223"]Deezey[/URL] - I'm going to look back at my best raw D7100 shots and my D600 images and pixel peep. Once I have done that I will share my thoughts. I don't want to speak without reviewing side-by-side. I have a love affair with my D7100 and the D600 is a mistress on the side. I need to do a direct comparison of the files. @[URL="http://nikonites.com/member.php?u=9922"]nikonpup[/URL] - Light painting. The front foreground and tree was painted with my cell phone light. The light is clean and not too powerful. The cliffs were painted using a ~50 sum led light panel with a dial to increase and decrease output. @[URL="http://nikonites.com/member.php?u=12198"]snaphappy[/URL] - Lizard was on the D7100 and the Milky Way shot is the D600. Thanks for the compliment. I am working hard and taking every opportunity I can to learn and improve. This trip was particularly educational as I met up with my friend from back east that is a professional photographer. He was out here to shoot some event for Morgan Stanley (investment firm) and we decided to hook up for this shoot. He had never shot stars, Milky Way, or light painted. I in turn learned a new technique which is how I shot the tree. I keep getting comments from people that the tree looks like an overdone photoshop image when it's not, it was a technique. Just a something I learned from my friend. The benefits of what can be learned shooting with another person at your same dedication level approximate skill level is priceless. We both walked away far better photographers from our shared shooting. The Milky Way shots alone started at 11 p.m. and went until 5 a.m. when that pesky ball of fire started to screw up the sky. And the above image took about 20 shots to get it right as we dialed in the two lights and their exposure time. Thank you to everyone for their comments, compliments, and help along the way. [/QUOTE]
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Moab Man 2014 Project 365
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